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Dermoscopic patterns of naevi in fifth grade children of the Framingham school system
Author(s) -
Scope A.,
Marghoob A.A.,
Dusza S.W.,
Satagopan J.M.,
Agero A.L.C.,
BenvenutoAndrade C.,
Lieb J.A.,
Weinstock M.A.,
Oliveria S.A.,
Geller A.C.,
Halpern A.C.
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
british journal of dermatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.304
H-Index - 179
eISSN - 1365-2133
pISSN - 0007-0963
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2133.2008.08510.x
Subject(s) - medicine , pediatrics , demography , dermatology , sociology
Summary Background  Childhood is a critical period for naevogenesis. Objective  To describe the prevalence of dermoscopic patterns of naevi using cross‐sectional data from a population‐based cohort of children. Methods  We obtained overview digital photography of the back of fifth graders (age 10–11 years) from all 10 schools in Framingham, MA, U.S.A. From each participant, dermoscopic images of up to four naevi were obtained, including the largest and one randomly selected naevus on the upper back and a corresponding pair from the lower back. Results  The study included 443 children, 61% boys, with 1181 back naevi analysed. Globular pattern was seen in 37% of naevi, reticular pattern in 13%, homogeneous pattern in 44% and complex (reticular–globular) dermoscopic pattern in 5%. Globular naevi were significantly more frequent and larger on the upper than the lower back. There was a significant hierarchic trend in naevus diameter by dermoscopic pattern: complex naevi (4·3 mm) > globular (3·3 mm) > reticular (3·0 mm) > homogeneous (2·8 mm). Reticular naevi were more prevalent in children with darker pigment phenotype ( P <  0·0001). There was a decrease in the size of naevi in children with darker pigmentation ( P  < 0·0001). Conclusions  An interrelationship was observed in childhood between dermoscopic pattern, naevus size, anatomical location on the back and pigment phenotype.

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